The Dodo Dragon and other stories

“The Dodo Dragon and other stories”
(Science Fiction). Nine quirky SF stories from the off-beat imagination of Sheila Crosby. Chose from .mobi (for Kindle) .ePub (for iPad, Sony reader etc.) or .PDF for almost anything. Due to the changes in EU sales tax, this book is currently only available from Amazon. Amazon.co.ukAmazon.comand Amazon.es

If you want a format other than .mobi, send me an email and I’ll see what I can do.

Cover for The Dodo Dragon and other stories

Sheila Crosby is originally from Leeds, but she lives in the Canary Islands, just off the North West coast of Africa. She caught the writing bug at high school, and she still hasn’t found a cure. Over the years, she’s sold over fifty stories, plus a handful of articles, but “The Dodo Dragon and other stories” is her first anthology. Two of the stories take place on the island of La Palma, where the author has lived for over twenty years.

Contents:

The Dodo Dragon

I am the last and I am lonely. Last night I saw three of the large moons hanging together, with the sea sparkling and dancing below. It gave me no pleasure. There was no-one to share it. [Read an excerpt]

Oh Baby!

The Ibble took great interest in the Earth Ambassador’s pregnancy.

The Appliance of Science

The fridge had gone missing again. All that was left was a rectangle of gleaming blue tiles where it had stood, surrounded by a ring of black grease. [Read an Excerpt]

Caught in the Oort

A trillion miles was a long way to come for revenge. I grinned. The Cult of the Bathtub would have to go much further than the Oort cloud to escape me.

Scream Quietly

Sweet sister, my husband grows more violent.

Infant Colic

Agonized screams ricocheted off the grey metal walls. Hopeless and bewildered, Helen cuddled her newborn son. His tiny mouth opened like a great red tunnel, and his knees jerked up to his belly in spasms.

Designer Genes

I threw the magazine across my living room as hard as I could. Its pages made a wiffling noise as it flew, and hit the wall with a twick. Then it fluttered to the floor still in one piece.Frankly, I’d hoped violence to an inanimate object would prove more satisfying.

Reviews:

“This was part of my inflight reading. If you like tongue in cheek retro sci-fi, often filled with bad puns, much in the vein of those 50s & 60s anthologies, with a twist of Ellison, Sheckley or Silverberg, then you’ll find stuff in here you’ll like.

In the spirit of true honesty, I’ll admit that Sheila’s my cousin (or, more accurately, second cousin once removed, or something), and I probably used to pull her hair when I was younger. I’ll also admit that I didn’t like every single story in the book, but that’s perfectly normal for short story collections. However, it did have me laughing out loud on several occasions, which resulted in some perplexed looks from my fellow passengers, since, unlike everyone else on the plane, I obviously wasn’t laughing at Johnny English.

But I digress. It’s amusing, and it’s good light reading.” Matt Kelland

“Almost all the stories are witty and amusing. Many of them with surprise endings, a talent that Sheila often uses in her stories. Some of the stories are set in the Canary Islands where Sheila lives and provides with a setting that isn’t seen in too many stories.

Scream Quietly was my favorite story in the book. That story is told in letters from an anguished mother who faces an unusual predicament, one of the stories with a surprise twist at the end.” Hank Quense

This collection has something for everyone and a story to fit every mood, from the poignant tale of the last dragon (The Dodo Dragon) to the zaniness of Jose’s AI appliances (The Appliance of Science), who plunk him down in the middle of the sardines’s funeral procession—a Canary Islands carnival tradition.

Crosby, a British expat living on the Canary Island of La Palma, also draws on local color for a unique alien contact story (Zuggy Zu and the Humans) which offers some insights as to what really goes on in the observatories.

There’s plenty of drama in the time travel story, “Scream Quietly”, as well as in “Breathing Space”—an asteroid mining disaster in which a desperate mother finds a new use for the freezer. I won’t hint at the ending of “Infant Colic” but it might make you shudder. Sprinkled liberally in between are a delightful assortment of “Feghoots”—short-short stories featuring elaborate and atrocious puns.

Sheila has had lots of short stories published, but this is her first collection. I’m hoping there will be more. Janice Clark